Academics have offered measured responses to a聽recent court ruling appearing to聽nullify the Turkish president鈥檚 power to聽appoint university rectors, telling Times Higher Education that a聽complete 鈥渙verhaul鈥 of聽the country鈥檚 higher education system was needed.
Earlier this month, Turkey鈥檚 Constitutional Court discarded several provisions of a聽2018 decree, ruling them unconstitutional; among them was a聽provision enabling the president, Recep Tayyip Erdo臒an, to appoint university rectors. Subsequently, the European University Association called for the Turkish authorities 鈥渢o聽seize the opportunity to聽thoroughly reconsider how university rectors are appointed鈥.
Taner Bilgi莽, an industrial engineering professor at Bo臒azi莽i University and a former member of the institution鈥檚 executive board, stressed that the ruling was less a rebuke of the articles themselves than it was a verdict on the legal means by which they had been implemented, with the court concluding that such provisions could not be enacted by decree.
鈥淭he Constitutional Court鈥檚 annulment decision was based on procedural grounds rather than the essence of academic freedom and institutional autonomy,鈥 Professor Bilgi莽 said. 鈥淣evertheless, this necessitates that the parliament draft new legislation. Whether the political parties in parliament can negotiate new legislation in good faith remains to be seen.鈥
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Halil Ibrahim Yenig眉n, associate director of Stanford University鈥檚 Abbasi Program in Islamic Studies, said that 鈥渋n聽practice, Erdo臒an has not lost any of his power to shape academia鈥, adding: 鈥淎lthough this might signal the court鈥檚 attempt to ameliorate the heavily wounded rule of law in Turkey, it is not quite significant enough to irk the president or to make him feel threatened.鈥
Restrictions on academic freedom in Turkey have intensified in the wake of a failed coup in July 2016, after which a series of decrees institutionalised the president鈥檚 power to appoint university rectors. Thousands of academics have been sacked in the years since.
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At Bo臒azi莽i, which is among Turkey鈥檚 most prestigious institutions, protests broke out in January 2021 after the appointment of presidential loyalist Melih Bulu as聽rector. Hundreds of demonstrators were arrested, and Professor Bulu was removed from the role after six months. He was replaced by Naci 陌nci despite widespread opposition from faculty; for the past three years, Bo臒azi莽i students and staff have held a daily vigil in protest outside the rector鈥檚 office.
Professor Bilgi莽 said Turkey 鈥渕ust overhaul its higher education system鈥, telling 色盒直播 that 鈥渁聽single, highly centralised higher education law, along with a聽supposedly autonomous Council of Higher Education whose 21聽members are all appointed by the president, has deteriorated the integrity鈥 of the country鈥檚 universities.
鈥淭he value of degrees obtained at many universities is debatable, and [Turkey] has the lowest employment rate of university-educated adults among OECD countries,鈥 Professor Bilgi莽 said. 鈥淯niversities lack the autonomy to determine their own academic and administrative paths.鈥
Ali Alpar, an emeritus professor at Sabanc谋 University, told 色盒直播: 鈥淭urkish science and the quality of teaching are deteriorating as some researchers, like other professionals, are leaving the country 鈥 not only because of the economic crisis, but also because of arbitrary rulings, deterioration of academic freedom, and the hostile and incompetent 鈥榓dministration鈥 of appointed rectors.鈥
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Dr Yenig眉n, who was fired from Istanbul Ticaret University in 2016 after signing a petition opposing Turkey鈥檚 鈥渄eliberate massacre and deportation of Kurdish people鈥, said academic freedom in Turkey 鈥渉as gotten worse and worse鈥 in the years since the coup attempt. 鈥淭here are even deans who have placed cameras in classrooms and berate academics if they say anything they deem controversial. Students keep informing on their professors. Many important topics cannot be studied at all,鈥 he said.
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